Women in Latin music

Women have made significant contributions to Latin music , a genre which predates Italian explorer Christopher Columbus ‘ arrival in Latin America in 1492 and the Spanish colonization of the Americas . The earliest musicians were native americans , hundreds of ethnic groups across the continent, whose lyrics “reflect conflict, beauty, bread, and loss that mark all human experience .” Indigenous communities reserved music for women , who were given equal opportunities to men to teach, performance, sing, and dance. Ethnomusicologists have measured ceramic, animal-bone, and cane flutes from theInca Empire which indicates a preference for women with a high vocal range . Women had equal social status , were trained, and received the same opportunities in the late 15th century. European settlers brought patriarchal, machismo ideologies to the continent, replacing the idea of ​​equality between men and women. They have a native music with “savagery” and European music with “civilization”. Female musicians tend to be darker-skinned as a result of the slave trade (which increased the population of African Slavs), and contemporary society denigrated music as a profession. Latin music became Africanized, with syncopated rhythms and call-and-response ; European settlement introduced harmony and the Spanish decima song form.

Since the pre-recording era of music , Latin music was male-dominated, and there are relatively few examples of female songwriters , music producers , record executives , and promoters . Women lacked access to musical training; music programs were nonexistent, and cultural norms discouraged female participation. Latin music had a primary male presence; men discriminated against women, limiting them to singing or dancing and discouraging them from becoming instrumentalists , writers, composers , arrangers , and executives. Women artists in the sub-genres of Latin music, Selena , Jenni Rivera, Jennifer Lopez , Ivy Queen , Julieta Venegas , and Ely Guerra . have been credited with enhancing the genera ‘female presence; they have broken through barriers, reshaping Latin music and public perceptions of female sexuality , gender, and femininity . Women in salsa music are significantly underrepresented in the industry, with the exception of Celia Cruz , having been associated with the emergence of the gender; for example, in the British documentary Salsa: Latin Pop Music in the Cites (1985), Cruz is one of the only female singers who is mentioned.

Women Latin singers have a significant demographic imbalance on their billboard music charts compared with their male counterparts. As radio formats explores genres, such as reggaetonand regional Mexican music , women on the billboard Latin music charts are periodically absent. The last female singer with a number-one was Sofia Reyes , whose collaborative ” Solo Yo ” ended a five-year drought on the Latin Pop Songs chart in 2016. A year earlier, on the 50-position Hot Latin Songschart, 22 weeks passed by a woman. Reyes has expressed concern about the disparity between male and female performances at Latin music awards shows, noting that 90 percent of the performers are male. Other female singers, such as Chiquis Rivera , have been attributed to women in Latin music to sexist radio programmers. Latin music executive Alexandra Lioutikoff believes that the decline is due to a lack of female collaboration. Latin music remains male-dominated, and the music industry has “prejudiced practice” limiting female recording artists.

Characteristics

Latin American music is varied; it includes thirty countries, influenced by European , African , and Amerindian cultures. [1] Latin music uses two European languages: Spanish and Portuguese , though modern-day widely distinguishes the genre as primarily recorded in French and Italian . [1] Although heterogeneous, Latin music commonly includes Spanish decimatedsong, African syncopated rhythms and call-and-response , and European harmony . [2]

History

Pre-Columbian Latin America

Pre-modern Latin music refers to music by Native Americans , [3] hundreds of ethnic groups across the continent. [4] The first inhabitants of Latin America settled 30,000 years before the arrival of Christopher Columbus at the peak of native cultural diversification into simple and complex societies. [5] These included sedentary agricultural societies tribes and hunter gatherers, [5] Who blood prayers to a deity asking for prosperity [3]with lyrics of “conflict, beauty, pain, and loss”, and music reflecting their understanding of the universe. [6] They had “intricate ways of explaining the relationships between the sound, social organization, time, and the sacred”, [6] and their rituals included dramatized performances of mythology vocalizing their view of creation. [7] The creation myth of the Keres people of Laguna Pueblo (present west-central New Mexico ) describes “the unformed cosmos as the domain of Tse che nako” (Thought Woman or Spider Woman) who chantslife into two sacred bundles That Become the sisters Uretsete and Naosete (She Who Matters and She Who Remembers). ” [7]

Indigenous communities predating Columbus’ arrival reserved for music . [8] During the Inca Empire in the mid-14th century, women from royal families and selected acallas (chosen ones) Were taught science, art, poetry, and music from “wise elders”. [9] The “chosen ones” were selected for their beauty and “quality of their voices.” [9] There were six houses, which were called ” taqui” ( taqui means “song”), which “singed voices” with “gifted” singing voices.vocal range . [9] ALTHOUGH no musical notation or scripts survive, archaeologists-have uncovered a variety of ceramic, animal bone, and cane flutes . [9] Ethnomusicologists who have measured the flutes have found their pitch compatible with a high vocal range. [9] Women in these communities were well-treated, [10] with equal opportunities to teach, perform, sing, and dance (as soloists, with other women, or in pairs with men). [11] Female singers had a social status equal to men, receiving musical training and opportunities with their male counterparts. [12]

European arrival

Columbus’ arrival in 1492 and the Spanish colonization of the Americas brought patriarchy and machismo to the continent, overriding sexual equality. [10] Early Spanish music described as “property and mistrusted [by men].” [12] In a song, “Delgadina”, women are serving their “no matter the cost.” [12] According to author Janet Sturman, the Iberian idea of ​​machismo was held by the conquistadors . [12] Europeans who settled in the New Worldassociated native music with “savagery” and European music with “civilization”. [13] During the slave trade , musicians in Latin America primarily had a dark complexion. [14] This was an increase in the population of African slaves and the contemporary society as a whole. [14] Most slaves arriving in Brazil were “bi-musical”, and introduced their music to the country . [14] Rural Quechua -speaking Bolivian farmers about European resistance in songs with Native American and European influences. [15] BlackBolivians with European influence, performed as Africanized European music. [15]

In colonial Latin America, nuns wrote, directed, and performed music. [16] They played a variety of instruments, including the clavichord , harp , flageolet , and flute. [16] The nuns played in front of spectators, choirs, and high-ranking government officials. [16] Musically-adept, underprivileged women were allowed to perform during the nuns’ Christmas recital. [16] Performances were often “feminine acts”, such as sewing, embroidery, bakery, and selling “special confections.” [16]For two hundred years in Latin America, the “elite woman” was educated in the arts; “the rest” were consigned to cooking, sewing, spinning, weaving, embroidery, and music. [17] In 17th and 18th century Mexico City , music was often heard by visitors. [18] The music emanated from cathedral choirs, indigenous dancers, or black musicians organized in the city. [18] During the 17th century, Europeans and their descendants wrote and performed music in Mexico’s cities, which was repeated by blacks , mulattos , indigenous Mexicans, Asians , and ethnicities. [19] In 1690, Mexican author Sor Juana Ines de la Cruzwrote secular and religious poetry, plays, philosophy, and theology. [20] She has discussed topics ranging from mathematics to music with visitors, and has pursued a “life of the mind.” [20] Though her views have been suppressed, the defended Cruz ‘s women’s rights in education. [20]

At a 1691 celebration, European traveler Juan de Galde described his participation in dancing and singing and placing a scapular on two young women in Mexico. [18] A Mexican singer named Reina performed for six hours, which makes “the event more enjoyable”. [21] The “wild” celebration banned Jamaicans from entry. [22] In 1697, Neapolitan chronicler Gemelli Carreri wrote during his trip to the coast of the Dominican Republic that he saw a number of musicians trying to outdo each other in singing and drawing attention to their “perfection”. [18] In 1799 Buenos Aires , privileged women Were Encouraged to educate Themselves in the arts.[23] The government required that women be taught to read and write, in addition to physical education and music. [23]

Before recordings

Since the arrival of European settlers, Latin music has been male-dominated. [24] Musical training was nonexistent for women. [25] Male predominance in the genre left “power imbalances that acted as barriers to women’s participation in Latin music.” [24] Despite this barrier, women have become successful. [24] Under the authority of men, They Were limited to roles as vocalists or dancers Rather than instrumentalists , writers, composers, arrangers, and executives. [24] According to musicologist Ilan Stavans, female roles were related to traditional norms; “decent women” at home, cleaning and cooking. [24] Women’s dance routines were a growing concern among female fans and performers. [24] Female dancers, more closely scrutinized than males, were expected to follow “normative gender expectations” and “appropriate behavior”. [26] Although male dancers typically performed suggestively, women who were danced were similarly accused of being “loose” or “slack”. [26]

Genres

Tropical music

According to author Lise Waxer, Cuban trova singer Maria Teresa Vera is the “great-grandmother of all Latin women singers”. [27] “Arroz Con Leche” (“Rice Pudding”), which advises the listener to find a spouse who will take care of them, was criticized by feminist groups. [28] Bolero lyrics have a central theme of women’s desires , unrequited love , and abandonment, portraying women as “physical absence and emotional distance, as ungrateful beings” unquipped to love a man. [25] Cuban singer The Lupe “pushed the boundaries” of bolero music,music. [29] She toured the US with Tito Puente bandleader , and was one of the most popular Latin performers of the 1960s. [30] In her youth she dominated local singing competitions, which inspired her to pursue a career in music despite her parents’ desire to become a teacher. [30] La Lupe began playing solo and performed in Havana nightclubs. [30] Her popularity grew, and she owned and operated a nightclub in Cuba which was seized by the Castro government . [30]La Lupe emigrated to the United States, settled in New York in 1962 and performed with other performers. [30] She released several salsa albums with “devotional lyrics.” [30] Her concert demands began at the turn of the 1970s as her savings drained because of her second husband’s failing health. [30] She finished her career in a wheelchair at a final, 1985 concert. [30] La Lupe, who is devoted to Christian music in the Bronx , died of cardiac arrest in February 1992. [30] Cuban singers Rita Montanerand Celeste Mendoza were involved in the “appropriation and rearrangement of rumba “, a genre popular before salsa. [29]

As salsa music grew in popularity, Celia Cruz emerged during the 1950s and was known as the queen of the genre. [31] Although Cruz was instrumental in popularizing and developing male-dominated salsa, [25] few other women are associated with it. [25] She was the only female singer featured in the British documentary, Salsa: Latin Pop Music in the Cities (1985), which noted the absence of women in the industry. [25] According to the documentary, women were “not trained in popular music and that women dared not improvise- son (closeness) -on stage”. [25]Crossed boundaries set by public expectations for nightclubs, but she was the exception who proved the rule. [29] Opportunities for all-female salsa bands were nonexistent; Gender discrimination in the marketplace, and women were seen as “less than their male counterparts.” [29] In 1977 Cruz Recorded “Usted Abuso” qui gave a voice to battered women . [26] The 1980s saw the emergence of Roman salsa , which was “deemed to be homogenized, depoliticized, and ultimately, feminized.” [25]

During the 1990s, [32] increasing the genre’s popularity, [31] and female salsa singers broke the “sexist boundaries of the [Latin] music industry”. [27]Although women were becoming more popular, images of men were more than just those of women. [32] India , Corinne, Brenda K. Starr , Lissette Melendez , and Yolanda Duke were instrumental in refining salsa in that decade, though all were managed by men. [31] Their new salsa is influenced by African American music ( hip-hop , R & B , gospel, jazz , and soul ), which revolutionized traditional 1970s salsa. [31] According to author Lise Waxer, “careful and attentive listening” of their recordings indicated “female authority and influence-a female genealogy-of salsa music.” [33] Salsa’s leading female singer was La India , [34] who developed salsa romantica music during the 1990s, and whose lyrics are “turn the tables” on the male salsa narrative of women as objects of desire, “cruel and evil or idealized and unattainable . ” [29] In her most-popular song, ” Ese Hombre ” (originally recorded by Rocío Jurado ),[29] The song’s lyrics describe a man who is “a fool / stupid and conceited / selfish and capricious”, reversing male “discursive terrorism” towards their female partners. [29] India has been compared to Celia Cruz as leaders in their respective eras, [35] and to the Lupe in musical style: “nasal style of singing, growls, and screams that evoke an androgynous style rather than a soft melodious tone. . ” [29]

In her Spanish-language debut, Gloria Estefan released Mi Tierra (1993). It was a commercial success, debuting atop the new US Billboard Top Latin Albums chart. Estefan has been described by her Latin pop as well as performing pop ballads and soft rock . [36] She also ventured into salsa and merengue music , using salsa in her English-language compositions; ” Conga ” brought to European clubs. [37] The rural Cuban genre guajira offered a musical identity to Afro-Cubans ; [38] Albita Rodriguez became popular, and was named one of the top 100 personalities of the 20th century by Newsweek magazine. [39] Most of the repertoire are in love with “openly erotic lyrics” with hetero- and homosexual themes. [40]

The duo of Monchy and Alexandra “established bachata as a ‘nice’ music that could be listened to by the women and children.” [41] Women “embraced [the] clean-up”; the romantic bachata style, with lyrics, longing for a lost lover. [41] In 1950s bachata music, women were accused of “gold treachery or promiscuity,” in more humorous moments, referring to their sexuality and sexual organs with thinly veiled double hearers. ” [42] The lyrics were rooted in an industry where, in the workplace, it became more common, displacing men as breadwinners . [42]

In 19th-century merengue music, a man “won the love of woman” by dancing. [43] Modern merengue (a party genre) lyrics explored the “vicissitudes of urban life [and] employing skillful wordplay and humorous double hearers about women and sex.” [44] Because of the genre’s “air of male sexuality-Dominated” Dominican men Believed That making merengue music is “no fitting occupation for women.” [45] According to Santo Domingo , listening to music is “only for men” and a woman who enjoys music is considered “a crazy girl [and] a bad girl.” [45]During the 1970s, attitudes towards women and women in the society changed. [45] All-female merengue bands emerged in the 1980s, beginning with Las Chicas Del Can in 1984. [45] Participation in merengue increased in 1990, with women playing percussion and brassinstruments formally considered too difficult for women. [45]

Female merengue bands have been formed by successful male merengue musicians, who “often referred to the property of the [male musicians who formed them].” [46] The mainly-female merengue band Milly, Jocelyn and Los Vecinos formed after Las Chicas del Can. [46] The group became popular, despite not setting out to challenge existing gender roles. [46] Feminists have noted the “limited values” in merengue recordings by women, who are “not resolutely challenging patriarchal attitudes.” [47] Olga Tañón was the most successful female merengue artist in the 1990s, [44] and has been called the queen of merengue music.Tañón has been credited with popularizing merengue in Puerto Rico , a salsa-dominated market. [49] Her 1994 album, Siente el Amor , outsold her previous recordings: Mujer de Fuego (1993) and her platinum-certified debut studio album, Sola (1992). [49]

Regional Mexican music

Since the Beginning of radio women-have-been accepted as mariachi singers, Often performing duets with men. [50] The Mexican quintet Las Coronelas, formed by María Carlota Noriega during the 1940s, was the first mariachi all-female band . [50] The first all-female ranchera band, Las Generales (formed by Elena Muñoz), consisted of wives and mothers of male professional mariachi musicians. [51] The group was criticized by the public for playing in cantinas ( bars ), [51] and their partners destroyed their instruments. [51]Other all-female bands tried unsuccessfully to be pioneers. Four of the six-member Mariachi Estrella of Topeka and 110 others were killed in the 1981 Hyatt Regency walkway collapse . [51] [52] Rebecca Gonzales, who later joined the Los Angeles Uclatlan band, was the first female mariachi violinist . [50] According to Gonzales, the other members of Uclatlan found it “weird” that a woman was playing with them and she took the group about a month to accept her. [53] Gonzales was the first female Mariachi musician to break through professionally. [51] A role model for female mariachi hopefuls, she was inducted into the Mariachi Hall of Fame.Tucson, Arizona in 2004. [54] [55] Eva Ybarra mastered the accordion at a young age and began performing with her parents during the 1940s. [56] The 1962 film El Mariachi Canta pokes fun at the rarity of female mariachi singers, with men cross-dressing as women. [50]

Linda Ronstadt debuted on the Latin-music scene with Canciones of Mi Padre (1987), credited with inspiring mariachi rebirth in the United States. [51] Other moderately-successful mariachi singers are educator and Mariachi Hall of Famer Laura Sobrino, Cindy Reifer, Marisa Orduno, trumpeter Cindy Shea , Patricia Martin , and Judith Kamel. [57] In corrido , a ballad deconformación de los-line verses, [58] women, playing the roles of mothers, wives “or represented the subject of the protagonist’s affections.” [12] Female soldiers in the Mexican Revolutionwere styled as corridistas . [12] Women were singled out by Tejano music due to Tejano patriarchy. [59] Only a handful of female Tejano singers, including Chavela Ortiz, Lisa Lopez, Patsy Torres, Laura Canales , and Elsa Garcia , were successful in the genre before it became popular. [59] Other female singers who were moderately successful during the Tejano were Shelly Lares , Stefani Montiel, Mary Lee Ochoa, and Stephanie Lynn. [60]

At the turn of the decade, Tejano music was the fastest-growing music genre in the United States. [61] The American singer Selena dominated Tejano music, bringing it mainstream success. [62] [63] During her early career, she was often turned down by music because of her age and her fronting of a Tejano band . [64] Selena’s father, Abraham Quintanilla, Jr. was told that she would not be successful because she was a woman. [64] She was the first female Tejano singer to receive gold and platinum certifications, [65] [66] the first female Tejano singer to receive aGrammy Award for Best Mexican American Album , [67] the first Tejano singer to top the US Billboard Top Latin Albums chart, [68] and the first female to outsell Tejano male singers. [69] [70] After Selena’s 1995 murder , Tejano music waned in popularity. [71] Selena’s popularity increases after her death, and she is the only one to be seen with constant appearances on the US Billboard 200 . [72] Her posthumously-released album, Dreaming of You(1995), was the first recording by a Hispanic singer to debut atop the Billboard 200 chart.[73] [74] Selena’s music explored love, bread, strength and passion, [75] and Billboard called her best-selling Latin artist of the 1990s. [76] Latin music ENTERED the mainstream market in the late 1990s, Believed by music critics to be due to the death of Selena and the emergence of Ricky Martin , Christina Aguilera , Jennifer Lopez and Marc Anthony , [77] [78] with Greater commercial success and worldwide recognition than ever before. [79]

As Tejano music declined in popularity, norteño music was pioneered by Lydia Mendoza and Alicia Villareal . [80] Although Ilan Stavans found it challenging to describe Mexican singer Jenni Rivera as a feminist, he found that his recordings sparked debate in the Latino community about women’s roles. [81] Debuting on the music scene in 1994, Rivera’s music “addresses the lives of men and women of humble backgrounds”. [81] She was commercially successful as a vocalist in the subregional Mexican music scene and its subgenres, banda , conjunto(small band) and Tejano, before her death in a plane crash. [81] Mexican singer Lila Downs debuted on the Latin-music scene with her album, Ofrenda , in 1994. [82] Downs, a prolific innovator, popularized Latin folk music in recordings blending folk instruments with Oaxaca references. [82]

Urban music

As hip-hop and rap became popular in the United States during the 1990s, Latin singers began emulating them. [86] Men dominated the Latin urban scene; women were objectified, seen as accessories. [86] Unlike the hip-hop and rap music scenes, their Latin equivalents did not formulate a female role model; female Latina urban singers failed to achieve commercial success. [86] During the popularity of freestyle music (also called Latin freestyle or Latin hip-hopIn the 1980s, record companies began signing “attractive young women with little musical talent using the same production style for all of them, weakening rather than strengthening the style.” [87] Many Hispanic freestyle singers tried to downplay their Latino identity after radio programmers discriminated against records by Hispanic performers. [87] Lisa Velez changed her name to Lisa Lisa , and became one of the first commercially successful freestyle musicians. [87]Latin hip-hop singer Roja (one half of Rima Roja en Venus) expressing the difficulty of performing (in a male-dominated genre) to a song which is “insults based on having sex with the opponent’s mother, sister, aunt; by the names of women’s sexual organs. It was weird: they were managing to totally objectify women, and at the same time make us invisible. ” [88] According to Roja, in his early career as a freestyler rap men tried to “shut [her] up”. [88] Other female hip-hop singers, such as Argentinian MC Rebeca Lane and Ecuadorian Audry Funk, concur. [88]Argentinian Actitud Maria Marta, a hip-hop group formed in prison, has been called a pioneer and has inspired other female hip-hop singers. [88]

Reggaeton dancers have received a negative response from their sexually-suggestive routines, [26] with more public outcry about this type of dance focusing on female morality. [26]Reggaeton singer Ivy Queen addressed concerns in her 2003 single, ” Yo Quiero Bailar “, which confronts sexual accessibility; dancing suggestively with a man does not necessarily mean that she wants to sleep with him. [26] Recording Reggaeton Women called Ivy Queen “the spokeswoman for females in reggaeton” after her 2005 debut album, and she remains the only woman visible in the genre. [89] Reggaeton has been criticized for the roles of women play.[90] Recordings often reflect lyrics and dance routines suggesting doggy style sex, exemplifying machismo behavior and hypermasculinity . [91] Most reggaeton songs “[circumscribe women] to dance and fulfilling male sexual desire”, which “eliminates almost all possibility of action and translates their presence into a prize or trophy that men exhibit, dominate, and manipulate.” [90] In Ivy Queen’s song, ” Chika Ideal, ” the singer introduces her female friend to “the dance floor to satisfy her man’s fantasies and answer (with her body) every time he wants to call her.” [90] In reggaeton music videos, women often act out or “beg for sexual action”[92] In Resident’svideo for ” Chulin Culin Chunfly “, women wore costumes and played police officers, bartenders, and servers. [93] Before reggaeton became popular, Cuban singer Pedro Calvo invited preteens and middle-aged women onstage and began to “[go] down on them “. [94] Sexuality among young women in Cuba has been viewed as “normative learning behavior” descended from the Afro-Cuban Palo religion , where men and women dance closely before “the man goes behind the women in a picaresque way” and emulates a ” gesture of appreciation “. [94]Cover images of reggaeton records often feature women who are “voluptuous, provocative, and scantily clad.” [95]

Latin pop

Selena’s music influenced Jennifer Lopez, [96] [97] who played the singer in her 1997 biographical film and debuted in the Latin music market with salsa singer Marc Anthony on the 1999 single ” No Me Ames “. [98] Lopez remained in the American pop-up early 2000s and returned to Latin music with her Spanish-language debut, Como Ama Una Mujer , in 2006. [99] The album was a commercial success, debuting in the top ten of the Billboard 200 and joining the handful of Hispanic artists with an album in the chart’s top ten. [99] Mexican actress and singerThalia debuted on the Latin music scene during the early 1990s. [100] In mid-decade the singer became commercially successful, with her album In Extasis (1995) certified platinum. [100] She contributed to three tracks for the 1997 soundtrack of Fox Animation Studios ‘ Anastasia . [100] Thalia’s lyrics explores “women or men in a narcissistic, neoliberal , first-world context but do not make sense in the general context of Latin American ordinary life” attributed to other female performers, such as the Mexican singer Paulina Rubio and the Spanish singer Belinda . [101]Thalia and Rubio have been called “young, blonde, and thin”, wearing “fashionable” clothing, whose “dull” lyrics assume the role of a “seductive, sexy, young woman who wants a macho-man at heart.” [101] According To musicologists Jacqueline Eyring Bixler and Laurietz Seda, Thalía and Rubio’s music does not address “mature and / or working-class women”. [101]

.

Shakira’s major-label debut, Pies Descalzos (1995), was the singer’s “breakthrough album” in the Latin-music market and yielded the hit single ” Estoy Aquí “. [102] [103] She had a Latin pop rock sound, influenced by Middle Eastern and Latin American music . [104] Shakira continued to win the Grammy Award for Best Latin Rock Album -nominated Dónde Están los Ladrones? (1998), [105] and joined Gloria Estefan and her husband, Emilio , to produce her first English-language album; it yielded ” Suerte”, which brought her mainstream success [106] Formed in 2006 in Argentina, the Kumbia Queers have recorded cumbia and Latin pop tracks with” ironic and witty articulations of lesbianism [ sic ] desire “. [26]

In Spain, Lola Flores is hailed as the queen of flamenco music and Rocío Jurado is considered “one of the purest voices of all time” in the country. [107] Music executive Lynn Santiago, who represented Yolandita Monge , Lissette Melendez, and Vikki Carr during the 1980s, said in a Billboardinterview that she wanted “to represent only a few individuals in order to give them individual attention.” Latin pop musicians from Puerto Rico, such as Lucecita Benítez and Monge, had been promoted to “bring local performers” by “offering a big fiesta for the people [of Puerto Rico].” [108]Other Latin pop musicians popular in Puerto Rico during the 1980s include Conchita Alonso, Maggy, Lunna “Cheo” Feliciano, Sophy Hernandez, and the Argentine duo Pimpinela . [109] In mainstream pop, female musicians Mariah Carey , [110] Debelah Morgan , [111] Jessica Simpson , Celine Dion , Carole King , Tina Arena , Gloria Gaynor , Alexia , Jennifer Rush , Lara Fabian , Madonna , Laura Pausini , [ 109] 112] Beyoncé ,Selena Gomez , [113] Demi Lovato , Azealia Banks , Ariana Grande , and Toni Braxton [114] often record Spanish-language versions of their songs.

After winning the inaugural Festival of Latin Song in Puerto Rico in 1969, Lucecita Benítez “single-handedly put Puerto Rico on the map.” [115] Her winning song, ” Genesis “, expressed “extreme male melancholy”; author Licia Fiol-Matta called Benitez a “male female” whose delivery “unexpectedly delivered this affect home.” [115] Throughout her career, Benítez performed and recorded atypical compositions of Puerto Rican music; nonconforming to gender roles, they did not address heterosexual desire. [115] She survived several silencing attempts by those who disliked her music. [115] Women remain a minority in Puerto Rican music, Myrta Silva singers ,Ernestina Reyes and La Calandria have achieved moderate success. [116]

Rock en Español

See also: Women in rock

The 1989 single “Virginidad Sacudida” by Mexican hardcore punk band Secta Suicida Siglo explores sexual repression among women, challenged heterosexism in Latin music, and opposed refraining from premarital sex for fear of being called a prostitute. [26] Colombian singer Andrea Echeverri’s music “underlines the hybrid nature of Latin American culture”; called the most-important female rock in español interpreter, she “incorporates [her music with] the past rather than refusing it or mocking it.” [117] Echeverri is the lead singer of Aterciopelados , the only female-led rock in españolband. [117] She pursues a feminist agenda with her music, which has made her popular in the “most revolutionary and controversial musical genres in Latin America.” [117] The singer grew up by boleros, ballads, and rancheras. [118] She decided to continue her education in the arts, returning to music during the 1980s. Echeverri joined Delia y Los Aminoácidos in the 1990s; influenced by punk and hardcore music, the band’s name was later changed to the Aterciopelados. [118] Because of Echeverri’s interest the band’s repertoire focused on women’s issues, with lyrics about women’s relationshipsand “overdramatized passionate love”, and examining Latin America’s ideology and history of traditional love. [118] As her popularity grew, Echeverri became a feminist icon and released an underground recording : Con el Corazon en la Mano (1993). [118] The album, intended for demo , reached the top ten in Colombia and piqued the interest of BMG Music Group and MTV . [118] The band followed with El Dorado (1995) and went to London to produce La Pipa de la Paz (1996), which was certified gold in Colombia and received Aterciopelados’ first nomination for theGrammy Award for the Best Latin Alternative Music Album . [118]

Although some female, they have explored a range of feminist topics, including sexism , domestic abuse , and “reclaiming women’s sexuality through their music”, others (such as Julieta Venegas ) have refrained from labeling themselves as feminists. [26] Venegas said in a 2004 interview that her music has a “feminine point of view” and does not delve into feminism. [26] Chilean folklorist Violeta Parra recorded songs about failed heterosexual relationships, emphasizing men’s incapacity to commit to a woman. [116] Called the “bad girl” Latin American rock music, Alejandra Guzmanhas attained “tabloid notoriety for her flesh-baring displays on stage and for a series of controversial moves in her personal life” [119] . [119] Her parents, Enrique Guzmán and Silvia Pinal , were both recorded and performed in the Mexican Sonny and Cher . [119]

Daniela Mercury is one of the “best-known Brazilian female singers”. [128] During the 1950s, some female singers in Brazil were called prostitutes and risked being labeled “promiscuous or male … [or] lesbians”. [129] According to authors Oliver Marshall, Dilwyn Jenkins and David Cleary, the country has “a strong tradition of producing excellent female singers”. [130] They list Elis Regina , Gal Costa , Marisa Monte , Silvia Torres, Belô Velloso, and Fernanda Porto, as examples of the sizable roster of women in Brazilian music. [130]

Visibility

Although women have been credited with reshaping Latin music and public perceptions of sexuality, gender, and feminism, [131] the Latin music industry remains male-dominated. [24]American musicologist Ilan Stavans credits Selena, Jenni Rivera, Jennifer Lopez, Ivy Queen, Julieta Venegas, and Ely Guerra for the visibility of women in Latin music. [24] NPR named Maluca , Bomba Estereo , La Lupe, Gloria Trevi , Chavela Vargas , Tita Merello , as ” las mostras , fierce women of Latin music.” [132]Billboardmagazine named Selena as “role model to Latinas everywhere”, [133] and Latina magazine named Gloria Estefan as “a role model for women across the globe.” [134] According to Latina , Rita Moreno singers , Selena, Gloria Estefan, Celia Cruz, Shakira, and Jennifer Lopez “changed the world” with their work, achieved “more and [gave] more.” [134] With Selena, Jenni Rivera has been credited with the presence of Mexican women in the United States [with whom they could]. [135]In Tejano music, Selena ‘s popularity has helped open the doors to other female singers. [80] Because of the singer ‘s influence, women in Tejano music emerged as “significant” in the genus during the 1990s and major record labels increased their female representation. [80] After Selena, women were “a significant part of [the Tejano and regional Mexican music] industry.” [80] Her Dreaming of You (1995) topped the Billboard 200 chart, the first Hispanic artist and the first woman to do so. [136]At the turn of the 21st century, Thalia, Paulina Rubio, Jennifer Lopez, Shakira, and Pilar Montenegrowere the most popular female Latin pop singers. [137] Graciela Beltran, Jennifer Pena, Ana Gabriel , and Paquita del Barrio were the most popular female singers in their respective regional-Mexican genres, [137] but female singers remain “rare” in regional Mexican music. [137]People in Espanol named singers Lucero , Chiquis Rivera , and Jennifer Lopez in its 2017 list of the top 25 most-powerful Latina women. [138]Billboard released a list of the top 100 music executive, qui included Maria Fernandez (senior vice president and CFO of Latin operations Iberia- Sony Music Entertainment) and Rocio Guerrero (global head of Latin content programming for Spotify ). [139]

Women in mariachi music are considered to be widely accepted, contemporary female singers in the genus found in “unwelcoming environment for females.” [50] According to the Duranguense group Los Horóscopos de Durango, in 21st-century regional Mexican music is “hard for women to actually be respected, to be taken into consideration, to be given the time to show [their] talent.” [140] The group has found the genre to “struggle” because of male dominance. [140] In 2017, Univision broadcast the reality television show La Reina de la Canción ( Queen of Song), in which participants with “the best voices, compelling stories, and a desire to become a superstar”. [141]Billboard executive director of Latin content and programming Leila Cobo wrote that the public perception of regional music is a group of men dressed as cowboys. [142] In the 2004 and 2005 year-end charts, only one female in the genus reached the top twenty; in 2006, there were three. [142] That year, three singles by women topped the Hot Latin Songs chart: Shakira’s collaborative single with Wyclef Jean , ” Hips Do not Lie “; Paulina Rubio’s ” Ni Una Sola Palabra “,Anais ‘ ” Lo Que Son Las Cosas “. [143] In 2008, there were no number-one singles by a woman on the Latin music charts. [143] Early in 2009 Jennifer Lopez ended the drought with ” Que Hiciste ” (number one for a week), followed by Gloria Estefan’s ” No Llores ” and Fanny Lu’s ” Y Si Te Digo “. [143] In August 2009 three women (Shakira, Paulina Rubio, and Nelly Furtado ) made the top ten of the Hot Latin Songs chart, a “rare occurrence”. [143]According to industry observers, women on the charts are “cyclical, as every couple of years of estrogen appears on the typically testosterone-dominated Latin charts.” [143]

Women finalists at the 2016 Billboard Latin Music Awards were outnumbered by men, which was described by the magazine as a “continuing [challenge] facing female artists in Latin music.” [133] For 2017 International Women ‘s Day and Women’ s History Month , the music streaming service Spotify. [144] The playlist included music from Selena, Celia Cruz, and Natalia Lafourcade . [144] An April 2016 Billboard report noted the absence of women from the magazine’s music charts . [145]The postponement found que la last female soloist topped the US Hot Latin Songs chart four years Earlier: Shakira, with Maná (a male rock en español group), singing ” Mi Verdad “. [145] In 2012 Seven women had number-one on the Top Latin Albums chart, compared with 33 men. [145]Billboard executive Leila Cobo found that three of the seven women were veterans (Gloria Trevi, Thalía, and Ednita Nazario ), and another three were deceased (Selena, Jenni Rivera, and Natalie Cole . [145] Leslie Grace was the youngest female singer to reach number one on the Latin Airplaychart when she was 17 years old, [145] and Alexandra Lioutikoff was the first woman executive vice president at Universal Music Publishing Group’s Latin Division. [145] Asked why the visibility of women in Latin music has declined, Chiquis Rivera suggests that radio programmers are to blame for their ” machista culture.”Billboard 200.” [145][145] According to Lioutikoff, women (unlike their male counterparts) “rarely collaborate”.[145] In its report, Billboard compiled a list of the top five women with the most number-ones on the Hot Latin Songs; Gloria Estefan led the list with 15, Shakira had 10, Selena seven, Ana Gabriel six, and Paulina Rubio five.[145] The magazine found women “underrepresented on the Latin-music-focused Billboard charts”, with Rubio the last female number-one with “Me Gustas Todo” on February 11, 2012.[145] A discrepancy existed between the Top Latin Albums and the Billboard 200 charts; seven women topped the Latin Albums chart, compared to 21 on the

Women remain a minority in Puerto Rican music. [116] According to Licia Fiol-Matta, the music industry has a “prejudiced practice of limiting the number of women recording artists” and women singers “did not sell records since women did not buy records.” [116] In July 2017, Alejandra Guzmán and Gloria Trevi were the first female collaboration in the 24-year history of the Top Latin Albums chart to debut atop the chart. [146] In 2016, Mexican pop singer Sofia Reyes was the first female lead singer with a number-one in five years. [147] Her collaboration with Prince Royce on ” Solo Yo ” was the first one-on-oneLatin Pop Songs by Jennifer Lopez ‘” Ven A Bailar ” (2011) with Pitbull . [147] Eight women have topped the Latin Pop Songs chart as featured acts, duets or groups with female leads: “Solo Yo” (Sofia Reyes with Prince Royce, April 23, 2016); “Mi Verdad” ( Maná , featuring Shakira, April 4, 2015); ” Corre! ” ( Jesse & Joy , March 31, 2012); ” Dutty Love ” ( Don Omar with Natti Natasha , March 24, 2012), ” Fuitte Tu ” ( Ricardo Arjona with Gaby Moreno , March 10, 2012); “”(Pitbull with Ne-Yo , Afrojack and Nayer , July 23, 2011), and” Ven A Bailar “(Jennifer Lopez with Pitbull, June 18, 2011). [148] Amaya Mendizabal of Billboard called the decline of women on the Latin music charts “an ongoing trend.” [148] In 2015, 22 weeks passed without a female-led single on the 50-position Hot Latin Songs chart. [148] According to Mendizabal, the absence of women on the Latin music charts is “partly attributed to the steady popularity of reggaeton and regional Mexican music, which is often led by male acts.” [148]Mendizabal wrote that “traditional pop songs” rarely top the Hot Latin Songs chart; four pop songs did so in the last three years, most by men. [148] Sofia Reyes has commented on the lack of women performers at Latin-music awards shows, telling Jeff Benjamin of Fuse TV that 90 percent of awards-show performers are men. [147]

In July 2017, Spanish writer Daniela Bose noted the absence of women in Spanish music charts in comparison with those of France and Italy ; culturally similar to Spain, women were more successful in the latter countries. [149] Bose analyzed the Spanish Albums and Singles Charts , finding that the only Spanish singers who were in the top 50 were Malú , Vanesa Martin , Sweet California, India Martinez , and the Spanish folk music singers Mónica Naranjo and Isabel Pantoja . [149]When Bose expanded her search to the next 50 positions, she found only non-Spanish singers. [149] She Concluded That listeners HAD REPLACED Spanish and Latin pop music with reggaeton and trap music , genres Performed by men with lyrics belittling women “have meat”. [149] Bose found a subtext in the songs encouraging female infidelityfor sexual reasons, alluding to a non-committed relationship. [149] According to Bose, music “is not one of those ‘secure’ professions [for those who] seek stability”; she found women away from prominent positions held by men, such as heading to record label, producing concerts, and audio engineering; in these fields, with higher pay and power, women lack “decision-making process [es] that set the path for [the Latin music] industry.” [149] “What dazzles is the beauty of the final work, regardless of who creates it.” [149]